iKSil IHungarian Studies ^eviezu Vol. XXXIII, Nos. 1-2 (Spring-Fall, 2006) Special Volume: The Image of Hungary and Hungarians From the Fifteenth to the Twenty-First Century edited by Nandor Dreisziger HUNGARIAN STUDIES REVIEW HUNGARIAN STUDIES # NATIONAL HUNGARIAN STUDIES ASSOC. OF CANADA SZECHENYI LIBRARY ASSOCIATION (USA) VOL.33, NOS. 1-2 (SPRING-FALL 2006) EDITOR: NANDOR DREISZIGER, Royal Military College of Canada EDITORIAL ADVISERS OLIVER BOTAR GEZA JESZENSZKY University of Manitoba Corvinus University, Budapest GEORGE BISZTRAY MARIA H. KRISZTINKOVICH University of Toronto Vancouver, B.C. BARNABAS A. RACZ ISTVAN MONOK Eastern Michigan U. National Szechenyi Library (NSL) AGATHA SCHWARTZ THOMAS SAKMYSTER University of Ottawa University of Cincinnati KATALIN FABIAN S.B. VARDY Lafayette College Duquesne University SUBSCRIPTION MANAGER (for Hungary): TIMEA KIRALY (NSL) All correspondence (excepting matters pertaining to subscriptions in Hungary) should be addressed to: Prof. Nandor Dreisziger, Department of History, Royal Military Coll. of Canada, P.O.B 17000 STN FORCES, Kingston, ON K7K 7B4 Canada. E-mail: [email protected] OR [email protected] Subscribers in Hungary should contact Timea Kiraly, at the NSL. E-mail: [email protected] Articles appearing in the HSR are indexed in: HISTORICAL ABSTRACTS and, AMERICA: HISTORY AND LIFE. Copyright © (2006) the Hungarian Studies Review. ISSN 0713-8083 (print, replacing 0317-204X); ISSN 1705-8422 (online) The Hungarian Studies Review is an interdisciplinary journal devoted to the pub- lication of articles and book reviews relating to Hungary and Hungarians. Since its launching in 1974, the Review has been a forum for the scholarly discussion of issues in Hungarian history, politics and cultural affairs. Subscriptions for individuals are $15.00 per annum. Institutional subscriptions are $25.00. Membership in either of the two Hungarian Studies Associations (of Canada or of the USA) includes a subscription. Visit: www.hungarianstudies.org and www.oszk.hu/kiadvany/hsr/hsr.htm (replacing: www.ccsp.sfu.ca/calj.hsr) Statements and opinions expressed in the HSR are those of the individual authors and do not necessarily reflect the views of the journal's editors. Desk-top typesetting by N. Dreisziger. Printed in Hungary. Distributed by the National Szechenyi Library: Budavari Palota, F Epiilet, 1827 Budapest, Hungary. Special Issue: The Image of Hungary and Hungarians From the Fifteenth to the Twenty-First Century edited by Nandor Dreisziger Articles by GEORGE BISZTRAY ZOLTAN FEJOS KENNETH MCROBBIE DANY DESCHENES BELA BODO THOMAS SAKMYSTER MARGUERITE DeHUSZAR ALLEN and EMESE IVAN Forthcoming Special Volumes: Laszlo Moholy-Nagy: Translating Utopia Into Action Oliver A. I. Botar, editor The Hungarian Revolution of 1956: Antecedents, Events and Consequences Nandor Dreisziger, editor Transylvania in the Twentieth Century Nandor Dreisziger, editor Contents Perceptions of Hungary and Hungarians Throughout the Centuries A preface by NANDOR DREISZIGER v The World Visits Hungary: Reflections of Foreign Travellers, 1433-1842 GEORGE BISZTRAY 1 Education in the Mother Tongue: The Perpetuation of Ethnic Consciousness among Hungarian-Americans, 1890-1920 ZOLTAN FEJOS 17 Ilona Duczynska Meets Ervin Szabo: The Making of a Revolutionary Personality — from Theory to Terrorism, April-May 1917 KENNETH McROBBIE 39 French Intellectuals and the Image of Austria-Hungary in France: Prelude to the Break-up of Historic Hungary, 1918-20 DANY DESCHENES 93 Militia Violence and State Power in Hungary, 1919-1922 BELA BODO 121 Gyula Gombos and Hungarian Jews, 1918-1936 THOMAS SAKMYSTER 157 The Wartime History of the National Bank of Hungary Through Hungarian-American Eyes MARGUERITE DeHUSZAR ALLEN 169 Sport Policy in Canada and Hungary: Lessons of Inclusion and Exclusion EMESE IVAN 191 Thomas Spira: an Obituary NANDOR DREISZIGER 203 OUR CONTRIBUTORS 205 Preface: Perceptions of Hungary and Hungarians Throughout the Centuries Nandor Dreisziger 2006 is a special year in the evolution of the Hungarian communities of North America, and especially, Canada. It marks the fiftieth anniversary of the coming of the refugees of the 1956 anti-Soviet revolution in Hungary. With the arrival of those refugees, the writer of these lines included, the life of Canada's Magyar colonies was revitalized. With over 38,000 additional Hungarians settling in Canada, a new era began in the Magyar neighbourhoods of metropolitan centres such as Toronto, Mont- real, Vancouver, Winnipeg, Calgary, Edmonton, as well as smaller settle- ments. With this event commenced what has been called the "golden age" of the Hungarian ethnic group in this country.1 To celebrate this anniversary we plan to publish two volumes of our journal, both of them bulkier than has been our tradition in the past. For the first of our "1956" commemorative issues we present a volume of essays that, on first impression, contains a selection of articles on an assortment of subjects with no manifest correlation to each other. Never- theless, the papers have one over-riding theme, since to a greater or lesser degree all of them deal with the image Hungary and/or Hungarians at home or abroad projected to the outside world. For this reason we feel entitled to call the volume "The Image of Hungary and Hungarians." The very first essay in the collection, by George Bisztray, our journal's former co-editor, treats the subject of what impression Hungary made on foreign visitors from late medieval times to the middle of the nineteenth century. The following paper, that of Zoltan Fejos, the C.E.O. of Hungary's Museum of Ethnography, examines the evolution of "mother tongue" education in early Hungarian-American communities and con- cludes that, among other things, the ethnic schools Magyar immigrants established at the turn of the last century, bolstered above all their self- image — and by doing so contributed to the preservation of their ethnic consciousness. The next study, by Canadian literary historian Kenneth McRobbie, tells the story that post-1914 Hungary's most prominent female revolutio- nary figure, Ilona Duczynska never managed to narrate in a comprehen- sive auto-biography. The article explains how this rebellious young woman of noble background managed to form an image of Hungary's Prime Minister Istvan Tisza as war-mongering anti-democrat, insensitive to the sufferings of his people — an image that many inside and outside of Hungary shared at the time. She convinced herself that only the elimination of Tisza would free her nation from its torments and tormen- tors. She was ready to sacrifice herself for her cause, but fate intervened at the last moment and the planned assassination became unnecessary. The next paper, by University of Sherbrooke political scientist Dany Deschenes, deals directly with the evolving image of Austria- Hungary — and within it, the historic Kingdom of Hungary — in the decades before (and also during) the First World War. He explains how the erosion of the largely positive image that Hungary had in France from 1848 to the 1870s contributed to the rise of a political atmosphere in which Hungary's dismemberment in the post-World War I peace settle- ment became possible and, in fact, a probable development. The following essay, by the Canadian-trained historian Bela Bodo, explains how the maraudings of the "White" officers' detachments during the chaos after a lost war, two unsuccessful revolutions, and foreign occu- pation, were perceived by Hungary's rulers as impacting negatively on the country's image, and — after many delays and some difficulties — reined them in. The next two papers, by American scholars Thomas Sakmyster and Marguerite DeHuszar Allen respectively, also touch on the issue of the image Hungarian right-wing leaders projected, for Hungary and for her politics, during the interwar and the World War II years. Finally, in her essay, Emese Ivan of the University of Western Ontario deals with the image people in charge of Hungary's sports policies project for their country and its sports establishment in the post-communist era. * * * We hope to mark the 50th anniversary of 1956 further by publishing in a supplemental 2006 volume a collection of essays pertaining directly to some of the antecedents as well as the aftermath of that important event in Hungarian history. We also plan to include papers as well as docu- ments in this anthology that deal with the coming of the 1956 refugees to Canada, their reception here and their adjustment to Canadian life. Our 2006 output represents a departure from our traditions not only in the publication of two bulky volumes in a single year but also in the authorship of their contents. Unlike other volumes over the years whose articles were produced by a combination of American, Hungarian, and Canadian authors, these volumes, in particular the first one, have been written mainly by Canadian academics. The fact that several scholars in Canada are active in the field of Hungarian studies is to some extent an indication of the continued vitality of Hungarian culture in Canada, a vitality that had been reinvigorated as a result of the coming of the refugees of 1956 to this country in that year and in 1957 — and to a lesser degree even thereafter in the case of refugees whose first destina- tion had been a country other than Canada. Our present volume, the 2006 "official" double-issue, represents a departure from our traditions in one other way as well. Some academic journals occasionally publish essays
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